Cybercrooks Steal Code For Electronic Arts Games Including FIFA 21 

by LethaEsposito747 posted Mar 27, 2024
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Hackers have stolen the source code for Electronic Arts (EA) games including FIFA21 and tools like the 'Frostbite' engine that powers titles such as the 'Battlefield' series.

The California-based video game company acknowledged the cybercrime on Thursday June 10, following a report from the news outlet A spokesperson for EA, however, has said that the attackers did not access any private player data and that the breach is unlikely to affect their business operations.

Source codes are the human-readable instructions that, when compiled, computers follow in order to run programs such as video games. 

The theft of the EA code could allow the hackers — or to whom they sell the code to — to find and exploit weaknesses in games using said code.

Hackers have stolen the source code for Electronic Arts (EA) games including FIFA21 and tools like the 'Frostbite' engine that powers titles such as the 'Battlefield' series. Pictured: the EA games logo looms large over their executive vice president Patrick Soderlund at the Microsoft Xbox E3 2017 Briefing at the Galen Center in Los Angeles, California, back in 2017

The California-based video game company acknowledged the cybercrime on Thursday June 10, following a report from the news outlet Vice. Pictured: a screenshot from FIFA21, one of the games whose source code was stolen by the hackers

'We are investigating a recent incident of intrusion into our network where a limited amount of game source code and related tools were stolen,' an EA spokesperson told Reuters in an emailed statement.

'No player data was accessed and we have no reason to believe there is any risk to player privacy,' they continued.

'Following the incident, we've already made security improvements and do not expect an impact on our games or our business.'

EA also said that it was 'actively working with law enforcement officials and other experts as part of [an] ongoing criminal investigation.'

According to Vice, hackers have been boasting online about the attack via underground internet forums, with one post saying they 'have full capability of exploiting on all EA services.'

Furthermore, they reported, darknet sites the hackers have been advertising the stolen software for sale across various dark web markets web forums.

A spokesperson for EA has said that the attackers did not access any private player data and that the breach is unlikely to affect their business operations.

Pictured: a screenshot from EA's upcoming 'Battlefield 2042' game, powered by the Frostbite engine whose code was stolen


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